| Literature DB >> 8917769 |
B R Beutter1, J B Mulligan, L S Stone.
Abstract
The perceived direction of motion of plaids windowed by elongated spatial Gaussians is biased toward the window's long axis. The bias increases as the relative angle between the plaid motion and the long axis of the window increases, peaks at a relative angle of approximately 45 deg, and then decreases. The bias increases as the window is made narrower (at fixed height) and decreases as the component spatial frequency increases (at fixed aperture size). We examine several models of human motion processing (cross-correlation, motion-energy, intersection-of-constraints, and vector-sum), and show that none of these standard models can predict our data. We conclude that spatial integration of motion signals plays a crucial role in plaid motion perception and that current models must be explicitly expanded to include such spatial interactions.Entities:
Keywords: NASA Center ARC; NASA Discipline Neuroscience
Mesh:
Year: 1996 PMID: 8917769 DOI: 10.1016/0042-6989(96)00064-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vision Res ISSN: 0042-6989 Impact factor: 1.886